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Public institutions tend to observe the same policies, even when there's no direct commercial interest. For example, if you join a Math department and start publishing papers that cast the department's research interests in a negative light, that's often a good way to get fired. I mean, seriously, go ask just about any professor of any topic at any university if their field is undervalued or overvalued. They'll almost universally tell you that their field is undervalued, underappreciated, and more important than people think. They deserve more funding, and you should definitely consider majoring in their field. |
I find it difficult to come up with an analogy from a public institution. What is the product the math department would be pressuring it's members to protect?
Sure, each department in a university believes it's work important. That doesn't seem even remotely similar to me as this issue with Google.